Here’s the full list of our WFCC Awards winners for this year. Congratulations everyone!

Best Foreign Film:Two Days, One Night

The Women Film Critics Circle is an association of sixty-five women film critics and scholars from around the country and internationally, who are involved in print, radio, online and TV broadcast media. We came together in 2004 to form the first women critics organization in the United States, in the belief that women’s perspectives and voices in film criticism need to be recognized fully. Here are our WFCC Tenth Anniversary Film Awards:

WOMEN FILM CRITICS CIRCLE AWARDS 2014BEST MOVIE ABOUT WOMEN Still AliceBEST MOVIE BY A WOMAN Selma:Ava DuvernayBEST WOMAN STORYTELLER [Screenwriting Award]Ida: Rebecca Lenkiewicz [Co-screenwriter]BEST ACTRESS Julianne Moore: Still Alice BEST ACTOR Eddie Redmayne: The Theory Of EverythingBEST YOUNG ACTRESSMira Grosin: We Are The Best

BEST COMEDIC ACTRESS Jenny Slate: Obvious ChildBEST FOREIGN FILM BY OR ABOUT WOMEN Two Days, One Night

BEST FEMALE IMAGES IN A MOVIE The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1

WORST FEMALE IMAGES IN A MOVIE Horrible Bosses 2BEST MALE IMAGES IN A MOVIE Love Is StrangeWORST MALE IMAGES IN A MOVIE Dumb And Dumber To

BEST DOCUMENTARY BY OR ABOUT WOMEN Citizenfour

BEST SCREEN COUPLE The Skeleton TwinsBEST THEATRICALLY UNRELEASED MOVIE BY OR ABOUT WOMEN GirlhoodBEST EQUALITY OF THE SEXESTIE: Life Itself, The Skeleton TwinsBEST ANIMATED FEMALE Winnie: Boxtrolls

BEST FAMILY FILM Big Hero 6WOMEN’S WORK/BEST ENSEMBLE The Homesman

*SPECIAL MENTION AWARDS*

COURAGE IN FILMMAKINGLAURA POITRAS: For bringing the Edward Snowden NSA revelations to light in Citizenfour, and driven into exile in Germany for doing so.*ADRIENNE SHELLY AWARD: A film that most passionately opposes violence against women Frontera Private Violence *JOSEPHINE BAKER AWARD: For best expressing the woman of color experience in America Anita: Speaking Truth To Power*KAREN MORLEY AWARD: For best exemplifying a woman’s place in history or society, and a courageous search for identity Belle

ACTING AND ACTIVISM AWARDRosario Dawson

For her work with The Lower East Side Girls Club; the environmental group Global Cool; the ONE Campaign; Oxfam; Amnesty International; Voto Latino; V-Day, a global non-profit movement that raises funds for women’s anti-violence groups; RESPECT! Campaign, a movement aimed at preventing domestic violence; and countless other organizations.

LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARDOprah Winfrey

COURAGE IN ACTING: [Taking on unconventional roles that radically redefine the images of women on screen] Julianne Moore: Still Alice

ACTION WOMEN AWARD Oprah Winfrey: Selma

THE INVISIBLE WOMAN AWARD: [Performance by a woman whose exceptional impact on the film dramatically, socially or historically, has been ignored] Felicity Jones: The Theory Of Everything

WOMAN’S RIGHT TO MALES ROLES IN MOVIES Jessica Chastain: Interstellar

MOMMIE DEAREST WORST SCREEN MOM OF THE YEAR AWARD:

*TIE Charlotte Gainsbourg: Nymphomaniac Uma Thurman: Nymphomaniac

JUST KIDDING AWARDS

*Best Female Images: Nymphomaniac

*Forty-Plus Female Empowerment Award: For the producers who give women over forty meaningful roles in movies on a regular basis, in an industry where forty is the new ninety-five - and as other than maniacs and witches.

*Merry Macho Award: Seth Rogen and James Franco: For advancing the cause of world peace with their presidential assassination comedy, The Interview, and for further extending Hollywood as a wing of the US military and the CIA. And, while possibly mulling the Interview II sequel comedy, the assassination of US President Obama.

BEST LINE IN A MOVIE: Big Hero 6: ‘Stop Whining. Woman Up!’

**ADRIENNE SHELLY AWARD: Adrienne Shelly was a promising actress and filmmaker who was brutally strangled in her apartment in 2006 at the age of forty by a construction worker in the building, after she complained about noise. Her killer tried to cover up his crime by hanging her from a shower20rack in her bathroom, to make it look like a suicide. He later confessed that he was having a “bad day.” Shelly, who left behind a baby daughter, had just completed her film Waitress, which she also starred in, and which was honored at Sundance after her death.**JOSEPHINE BAKER AWARD: The daughter of a laundress and a musician, Baker overcame being born black, female and poor, and marriage at age fifteen, to become an internationally acclaimed legendary performer, starring in the films Princess Tam Tam, Moulin Rouge and Zou Zou. She also survived the race riots in East St. Louis, Illinois as a child, and later expatriated to France to escape US racism. After participating heroically in the underground French Resistance during WWII, Baker returned to the US where she was a crusader for racial equality. Her activism led to attacks against her by reporter Walter Winchell who denounced her as a communist, leading her to wage a battle against him. Baker was instrumental in ending segregation in many theaters and clubs, where she refused to perform unless integration was implemented.

**KAREN MORLEY AWARD: Karen Morley was a promising Hollywood star in the 1930s, in such films as Mata Hari and Our Daily Bread. She was driven out of Hollywood for her leftist political convictions by the Blacklist and for refusing to testify against other actors, while Robert Taylor and Sterling Hayden were informants against her. And also for daring to have a child and become a mother, unacceptable for female stars in those days. Morley maintained her militant political activism for the rest of her life, running for Lieutenant Governor on the American Labor Party ticket in 1954. She passed away in 2003, unrepentant to the end, at the age of 93.